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Do You Register To Vote For A Specific Party

issues2000

Can I vote without registering with a party?


Anonymous asked this question on 8/1/2000:

After several stubborn years of ignoring politics, I'm ready to register to vote. I'd prefer not to join a political party but I've been told I have to. Is this true that I can't register to vote as non-partisan?


morrisonhimself gave this response on 8/2/2000:

Y'all exercise
* not* have to join a party.
There is not a state in the spousal relationship in which y'all
* have* to join a party to exist a registered voter. (In fact, in several there is no such thing as party registration, Georgia and Tennessee, to name 2.)
Now, if yous wanted to vote in a primary, and then yes yous have to be a member of -- registered in -- a party.
Delight besides conduct in heed there are many more only the two sometime parties, Democrat and Republican.
I recommend the Libertarian Party, if yous believe in the Constitution and private rights.
The Constitution Party, on the other mitt, wants to put the Bible into police. If y'all are a strong Christian, that might be your party.
The Green Party is partly for environmental regulation and partly for various other governmental controls, peculiarly against corporations (even though corporations would not exist except for authorities). You can cheque out the Dark-green Website and make up one's mind if you want to join it.
There is the Reform Party, and whatever information technology finally stands for. (The Reform convention is this month. Check the C-SPAN schedule.)
Don't forget the Natural Law Party. Its presidential nominee, for the 3rd election in a row, is John Hagelin. He, by the fashion, is likewise seeking the Reform Party nomination and has the gall to declare Pat Buchanan is trying to "hijack" the RP nomination! The NLP wants to make, not the Bible, but Transcendental Meditation the law.
Want booze banned? Bring together the Prohibition Party, which will have its presidential candidate on at least two state ballots this twelvemonth.
At that place are dozens of other parties, including various Socialist groups, several dedicated to some detail cause, or supposedly partisans of the working people, and some of which have purely local existences. In New York, for example, in that location are the Liberal, Conservative, Correct to Life parties.
W Virginia simply got ballot status for a party that exists nowhere else.
And last month, July, saw the kickoff convention of the new-ish Southern Party, which as well has a Website. (I retrieve it is a very not-racist but pro-secessionist party.)
The specific mechanisms exercise vary from land to country, simply, again, you do
* not* have to join a party, except to vote in the primaries.
You can register "Independent" or "not-partisan" or "none" or "American" or "Pajama" or "Birthday" and the registrar has to have your selection.
Let me know, please, if y'all take any specific party questions I tin help with.
Michael Morrison


madpol gave this response on viii/2/2000:

It depends on what state you are in. Still, declaring a political party amalgamation doesn't commit y'all to vote for that political party. You can as well always change your party affiliation to vote in the principal you desire to in any given yr.

In Texas, where the primaries are staggered, yous tin actually vote in all of them.


Bearding asked this follow-upwards question on 8/2/2000:

Thanks for the information. The reason I asked is because I tried to register through beavoter.org. They will send you a registration parcel for your land with your information on information technology and when I tried to submit my class without a political party selected, it told me information technology was required. Is there whatsoever mode I can ostend my state (Pennsylvania) requires party-affiliation?


madpol gave this response on viii/two/2000:

Call your local Lath of Elections, (They'll be in the Blue pages of the directory) to confirm the requirement. You can as well register at any DMV function or the Public Library.


Anonymous asked this question on eight/xi/2000:

I am a resident of California and am currently registered under one of the major political parties. I would similar to change my registration to be independent. How can I do that? I went to fill up out the online form and I noticed there were one of 2 possibilities. One choice was not to select any party at all. The other was to select an selection that said "Other" and write in "Independent." I'm a picayune weary of that because in that location was an "American Contained Party" and I don't want to be registered under them. Thanks.


madpol gave this response on viii/11/2000:

The party affiliation listed on your voter'due south registration is pretty much meaningless except to bureaucrats who utilize it in some kind of arcane ritual.

The parties themselves, (and this is important if y'all are trying to become a patronage task,) get by whose election you took when you lot voted in the primary. In that location are, of course, states where the primaries are staggered and you tin can vote in all of them.

So if y'all are uncomfortable with adjustment yourself with any particular party, get out the space blank. It doesn't really touch on anything.


Anonymous rated this answer:

Very quick answer. I know it doesn't mean annihilation to anyone else merely I wanted to change simply for my peace of heed. Thanks once again.


JesseGordon gave this response on 8/2/2000:

I agree with

-- it depends on your state, but of form you lot tin can always VOTE equally non-partisan, even if you have to Annals with a political party.

In Massachusetts, you lot tin register as "non-enrolled" which means no party amalgamation at all. That entitles you to vote in the general election just not in the primaries.

To vote in the primaries, yous DO have to selection a party, since you only get to vote in 1 political party's primary. Merely you can change your party registration on the day of the primaries at the polls, then vote, then immediately change back to non-enrolled. So you're only registered with a party for the ten minutes it takes to vote.

You'll have to figure out the rules in your state, merely the general idea nowadays is to get in as like shooting fish in a barrel as possible to register and vote, including for non-partisans.

Notation also that REGISTERING to vote with a party is Not the aforementioned as JOINING a party. "Joining" ways giving them a contribution, I'd say. Aye, the parties intendance if yous annals with them, since they count that for all sorts of things. Simply you certainly don't have to officially bring together the party in lodge to vote.


Anonymous asked this question on 5/sixteen/2000:

I am a registered democrat voter. My question is this. If I vote for any other political party too democrat will my vote be counted as anything simply a democratic vote (besides the principal elections) . I was told that it doesn't matter how I voted that once I registered that was what was used in the electoral votes on the national level. If and so, and then would registering as an independent voter allow me to vote for everyone and it would count as a vote for them?


madpol gave this response on five/17/2000:

Whoever told you that was in error. In many states, you tin but vote in the principal of the political party yous registered with. In other states, like Illinois, you can vote in any main by selecting that party's ballot. In Texas, where primaries are staggered, you can vote in all of the primaries.

But your vote in the full general election is recorded just the way you lot vote, without regard to your party amalgamation. Some precinct captains will try to alter ballots in one case they are bandage, simply this is becoming increasingly difficult and election fraud is more likely to be detected and prosecuted these days than in the by.

This, of course, assumes that you are living. If you are dead--and used to live in Chicago--your vote will be recorded Autonomous.


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Do You Register To Vote For A Specific Party,

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